About the OCNZ
The Osteopathic Council of New Zealand (OCNZ) regulates osteopaths under the HPCA Act 2003 — registration, competence standards, and fitness to practise.
Developed for osteopaths holding an Annual Practising Certificate from the Osteopathic Council of New Zealand (OCNZ). Our courses address clinical competence, cultural competence, ethical conduct, and fitness to practise under the HPCA Act 2003. Written by healthcare professionals who understand NZ regulation.
The Osteopathic Council of New Zealand (OCNZ) regulates osteopaths under the HPCA Act 2003 — registration, competence standards, and fitness to practise.
Aligned with OCNZ guidelines. Helping osteopaths facing an investigation, inquiry or fitness to practise review, and for CPD purposes.
We'll recommend the courses you need based on your situation
Covers ethical obligations including duties to report concerns, maintain honesty, and uphold probity in all professional dealings — core OCNZ requirements.
Covers professional standards and behaviours expected by the OCNZ — conduct, communication, teamwork, and maintaining public trust.
Explores the professional ethics landscape — ethical obligations, standards of practice, and regulatory expectations set by the OCNZ.
Comprehensive course on medical ethics principles — ethical frameworks, moral reasoning, and professional decision-making aligned with OCNZ guidelines.
Covers duty of candour obligations — being open and honest with patients when things go wrong, as required by the OCNZ.
Understand confidentiality obligations under OCNZ guidelines — data protection, justified disclosure, and information sharing.
Training on valid informed consent, patient privacy, capacity assessment, and chaperone requirements per OCNZ guidelines.
Communication skills that prevent complaints — breaking bad news, shared decision-making, and conflict resolution per OCNZ guidelines.
Create clear, legally defensible records meeting OCNZ standards — electronic records, amendments, and common errors.
Navigate social media risks — OCNZ guidance on online conduct, digital confidentiality, and reputation management.
Strengthen multidisciplinary teamwork — communication, handover protocols, hierarchy management, and safe team environments.
Maintain and demonstrate clinical competence as required by the OCNZ — patient safety, risk management, and governance.
Ethical and professional standards for safe prescribing — regulatory guidelines, controlled substances, and protocols.
What probity means under OCNZ guidelines — honesty, financial integrity, transparency, and managing conflicts of interest.
Navigate financial ethics — conflicts of interest, industry relationships, billing ethics, gift policies, and full transparency.
Practical guidance on rebuilding professional trust after an incident — restoring confidence with patients, the public, and the OCNZ.
Essential course for OCNZ proceedings — complaints, investigation, hearings, demonstrating insight, remediation, and outcomes.
Build professional insight — recognising limitations, understanding impact, and satisfying OCNZ expectations during proceedings.
Guidance on effective remediation — action plans, evidencing change, and demonstrating concerns are addressed.
Develop meaningful reflective practice — reflective accounts, structured frameworks, and meeting OCNZ expectations.
Demonstrate that past issues will not be repeated — root cause analysis, practice changes, and sustained improvement.
Guidance on managing complaints professionally — investigation process, response letters, lessons learned, and resilience.
Covers the boundary spectrum, dual relationships, warning signs of drift, sexual boundary violations, and maintaining trust.
Maintaining ethical boundaries in clinical relationships — patient interactions, colleague dynamics, and power imbalances.
If you are searching for osteopath CPD, ethics courses for osteopaths, or continuing professional development to support your Annual Practising Certificate (APC) and OCNZ recertification, these online courses are built for you. For osteopaths registered with the Osteopathic Council of New Zealand, the issues that most often put registration at risk are rarely clinical knowledge alone — they concern consent, confidentiality, professional boundaries, communication, documentation and conduct, measured against the OCNZ’s standards and the HDC Code of Rights.
The OCNZ recertification programme — the Continuing Competence Programme (CCP) — expects osteopaths who hold an APC to plan, complete and record continuing professional development, with reflection on its impact on practice. Our ethics and professionalism courses for osteopaths each award 2 CPD hours and document the ethical and professional learning the CCP is designed to capture. Confirm with the OCNZ how to record these in your CPD record.
Learning that a concern or complaint has been raised — whether to the Health and Disability Commissioner, your employer or the OCNZ — is one of the most stressful moments in an osteopathy career. Our courses on dealing with a complaint or investigation and fitness to practise explain the process and help you respond constructively and professionally.
When the OCNZ or a review panel assesses an osteopath, it looks for genuine insight, reflection and remediation rather than clinical knowledge alone — and assurance there will be no repeat of the concern. These courses give you documented, dated CPD evidence for a formal response or competence review.
The core obligations every osteopath relies on: informed consent, privacy and chaperones for hands-on treatment, confidentiality, the duty of candour after an adverse event, and accurate clinical documentation and record-keeping that stands up to scrutiny.
The conduct standards that most often draw complaints: professional boundaries, ethical boundaries with patients and colleagues, probity and honesty, financial integrity, and social media professionalism.
Many matters before the HDC or the OCNZ arise from communication breakdowns, concerns about clinical competence and patient safety, teamwork, or scope of practice rather than a failure of clinical knowledge. Understanding these standards is the most reliable way to reduce that risk.
Every course is online and self-paced, takes around two hours, and awards 2 CPD hours with a Certificate of Completion available for immediate download — NZ$99 per course. Browse the full ethics and professionalism CPD course catalogue for New Zealand osteopaths to match courses to your recertification, APC renewal or fitness to practise needs.
Courses written by healthcare professionals, aligned with OCNZ guidelines for osteopaths in New Zealand.
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